| A | B |
| advertisers | person, organization, or business firm that advertises or seeks to sell goods |
| editor | person in charge of a newspaper, magazine, etc. |
| divulge | make known; tell; reveal |
| intrigue | excite the curiousity and interest of |
| scandal | shameful action, condition, or event that brings disgrace or shocks public opinion |
| hoax | a mischievious trick, especially a made-up story passed off as true |
| impersonate | play the part of |
| substantiate | establish by evidence; prove |
| vague | not definite; not clear; not distinct |
| bullhorn | a megaphone that has been electrically amplified |
| charitable | benevolent and kind |
| admiration | a feeling of wonder; pleasure, or satisfaction |
| demurely | seeing more modest and proper than one really is; coy |
| conferring | talking things over; consulting together |
| radium | a readioactive metallic element |
| oblivious | not mindful |
| restitution | the giving back of what has been lost of taken away; act of making good any loss or injury |
| humanity | human beings; people; mankind |
| antibiotics | substance produced by living things especially a bacterium or mold that destroys or weakens germs |
| relapse | to fall back into a former state or way of acting |
| persuasive | able, intended, or likely to persuade |
| delusion | a false belief or opinion |
| compound | an enclosed yard with residence or other buildings in it |
| plotters | person who plots (a secret plan especially to do something wrong) |
| quest | a search or hunt |
| cajoled | to persuade by pleasant words, flattery, or false promises; coax |
| psychiatrist | doctor who treats mental and emotional disorders |